I love vector linux but I was wondering if you guys duel boot vector with another os. My Computer duel boots Vector Linux with Salix fluxbox. I do not use anything Microsoft due to frustration from viruses and rouges.

On my servers I run debian on one and ubuntu on another. I like the ubuntu server better because the same daemons use less ram at idle. I like the package manager, but I don't like the package creation process.

=== EDIT ===

I feel bad about telling a lie! I don't really like the package manager, too many functions are spread outside of apt-get. Having to keep track of what is done in dpkg-* and in deb* is no fun at all.

I have VL 7 Standard as the main OS on my three computers. I have Win 7 32 on one desktop, Win 7 64 on my HP laptop, and Win XP on the other desktop. Years ago I tried other Linuxes but around VL4.2 VL got so good that I couldn't see the point of using disk space for other distros.--GrannyGeek

Home server box = core2quad @ 2.6ghz w/4gb RAM and (1)x500GB + (1)x250gb. Runs Vlocity (VL 64b) as the main OS. No GUI, no screen, no keyboard, plain old headless box. Used as a file/media server in my LAN. Inside it, there is a VL7 STD install running a web server. There is also virtual machines for another VL install and WinXP for testing working related development stuff.

Vector Linux was what I started on years ago, but somewhat recently I tried Debian and was happy to see some of the Humble Indie Bundle games ran correctly under it that wouldn't work under VL. I've stuck with it for about half a year, getting into a few fist fights with the package manager not liking me manually updating one package to unstable (everything worked fine, but it insisted there were broken dependencies that HAD to be fixed before it could modify anything else on my system. Result: started using dpkg manually instead of apt-get). I also ran into problems trying to compile things from source (which I've been doing as long as I've used Linux), because the packages needed to build things were scattered about. I have come to the conclusion that I am simply a Slackware kind of guy. Vector Linux is nice because it's made to be comfortable to use, but it takes the Slackware point of view where it gives you all the tools to hack things yourself. As of a few days ago, I've got VL7 up and running on my main computer, and it's doing pretty well.

I've got a light-duty web server running Slackware...13? It seems like the simplest, most no-nonsense way to run a server, just using the first disk. The list of running processes doesn't even fill my screen in htop. Beautiful.